Giuliano da Sangallo (ca. 1445–1516) was an architect capable of managing the entire architectural process, from conception through realization. The pilgrimage church of Santa Maria delle Carceri in Prato (begun 1485), a milestone in Italian Renaissance debates around Greek cross-shaped churches, reveals both Sangallo's competence in building complex structural elements and his adherence to Leon Battista Alberti's theories (Figure 1). The complexity of Sangallo's design process makes it difficult to understand many of the architectural issues he tackled in this project, the solutions proposed in his drawings, and the eventual translation of his drawings into brick and stone. In this article, we overcome these difficulties by using three-dimensional models to analyze the church and its design process (Figure 2). Typically, a digital 3-D model of a building results from the virtual assembly of many architectural components. When those individual elements are coded to identify their mutual...
3-D Digital Modeling and Giuliano da Sangallo's Designs for Santa Maria delle Carceri in Prato
Sabine Frommel is chair of the Renaissance Art History Department at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris Sciences & Lettres. Her research covers a wide range of transverse themes, including great architects of the Italian Renaissance, the evolution of architectural typologies and languages in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, processes of migration in Europe, the representation of architecture in painting, the fortune of Renaissance up to the nineteenth century, and the birth and development of the discipline of architectural history. [email protected]
Marco Gaiani is a professor of architectural representation and a specialist in 3-D and 2-D computer imaging, modeling, and visualization for the study of architectural heritage, archaeology, and industrial design. He was one the first developers/users of laser scanning technology in the field of architectural heritage and archaeology and has also developed photogrammetry-related and digital color-related technologies. [email protected]
Simone Garagnani, PhD, is an Italian engineer and scholar whose research focuses on architectural representation, building information modeling, and virtual representation of historic buildings for cultural heritage and archaeological studies. [email protected]
Sabine Frommel, Marco Gaiani, Simone Garagnani; 3-D Digital Modeling and Giuliano da Sangallo's Designs for Santa Maria delle Carceri in Prato. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 1 March 2021; 80 (1): 30–47. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2021.80.1.30
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